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First Plugin ... Help with Public side needed
Hi
I’m trying to write a voting plugin.
I have the Admin side up and working. – Lots of adapting by looking at other plugins. – Mainly smd_bio.
Two tables are created.
An Extension Tab added from which you can input Voting titles and options.
You can Save – Edit & Delete.
Amazingly this all works.
I’m completely stuck on how to start with the public tag.
The idea is to have only one tag that took no attributes … <txp:geo_vote /> (if geo is available?)
So it’s easy to add to articles and all configuration is from the admin tab.
1. I’m not sure how to handle the event of the vote button being pressed.
2. There are some voting fraud prevention checks to do – cookie – ip – logged in? How do I handle setting and reading cookies, is there a preferred method?
I’m sure I’ll need a lot more help but getting answers to these 2 issues will be a start :-)
Thanks
Geoff
Last edited by geoff777 (2012-02-16 14:23:16)
There are 10 types of people in the world: those who understand binary, and those who don’t.
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Re: First Plugin ... Help with Public side needed
geoff777 wrote:
(if geo is available?)
Currently yes — grab it while you can.
how to handle the event of the vote button being pressed.
Before Txp 4.4.0 I’d have said AJAX is easiest by adding some jQuery to hook into your button like this:
jQuery(function() {
jQuery(".vote-button-class").click(function() {
jQuery.post(
'http://site.com/textpattern/index.php?event=geo_vote', {
step: "count_vote",
vote_for: "some_unique_ref"
},
function(data) {
// Parse the returned data block and do something
// to tell people their vote has been counted (or not)
// and disable / remove the vote button
}
);
});
});
But now that Txp requires a token to be passed on the admin side, I’m not sure if that approach is feasible any more. Requires thought. Does the code from the latest voting plugin cbe_helpful help at all?
How do I handle cookies?
Txp has the cs()
function (“cookie set”) to read them in.
$cookie_val = cs('my_cookie_name');
if ($cookie_val) {
// Yay! Cookie has been set to value $cookie_val
}
PHP has setcookie().
I need to grab the article_id
Pretty much everything you need will be in the globals $thisarticle
and $pretext
. If you dmp($thisarticle)
in your public-side code you can see what’s available when you’re viewing an individual article. But defend against missing array entries in your code by using isset()
first and/or testing if $thisarticle
is NULL (which it will be when not in article context).
Hope that helps.
The smd plugin menagerie — for when you need one more gribble of power from Textpattern. Bleeding-edge code available on GitHub.
Txp Builders – finely-crafted code, design and Txp
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Re: First Plugin ... Help with Public side needed
Thanks Stef
The button event is on the public-side.
When someone votes.
Ajax would be cool but I’m pretty clueless about using it.
I haven’t looked at cbe_helpful – I’ll check it out
$thisarticle[‘thisid’] should be what I need.
Thanks
There are 10 types of people in the world: those who understand binary, and those who don’t.
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Re: First Plugin ... Help with Public side needed
Bloke wrote:
But now that Txp requires a token to be passed on the admin side, I’m not sure if that approach is feasible any more. Requires thought. Does the code from the latest voting plugin cbe_helpful help at all?
But isn’t the voting for public-side, not for admin-side? If it was for admin-side, the token shouldn’t be a problem.
- it’s available via
textpattern._txp_token
in JavaScript. - There is always
jquery.serialize()
(normal HTML forms can be used to build the data). - And Textpattern’s dev branch ships with
postForm()
andsendAsyncEvent()
JavaScript functions.
But defend against missing array entries in your code by using
isset()
first and/or testing if$thisarticle
is NULL (which it will be when not in article context).
Batm… umm assert_article()
to the rescue. Gives out those useful error messages too when deemed needed.
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Re: First Plugin ... Help with Public side needed
geoff777 wrote:
The button event is on the public-side.
Yes, you’re right I’m talking crap. Gah, I need sleep / chocolate.
In addition to what Gocom suggests, you can hook your plugin into the public-side callbacks pretext
or pretext_end
. If you wrap the vote button(s) in a regular HTML form that passes some vars via method="post"
then when you click the button and it submits the page, your plugin can read the posted values ($val = ps('my_posted_input_name');
) and act accordingly, then let the page continue to render.
Downside: page refresh, which might look ugly.
(EDIT: aren’t postForm()
and sendAsyncEvent()
admin-side functions? Unless you include textpattern.js of course? Or have I missed something?)
Last edited by Bloke (2012-02-16 15:39:52)
The smd plugin menagerie — for when you need one more gribble of power from Textpattern. Bleeding-edge code available on GitHub.
Txp Builders – finely-crafted code, design and Txp
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#6 2012-02-16 15:57:23
- uli
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Re: First Plugin ... Help with Public side needed
In bad weather I never leave home without wet_plugout, smd_where_used and adi_form_links
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Re: First Plugin ... Help with Public side needed
uli wrote:
Not any longer ;)
It’s me who’s to blame.
Thank you … Now the pressures on to get this finished … :-)
Last edited by geoff777 (2012-02-16 16:25:05)
There are 10 types of people in the world: those who understand binary, and those who don’t.
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Re: First Plugin ... Help with Public side needed
Is there a best practice for outputting text on the public side?
I’ve got a voting form working with echo(); and a lot of escaping apostrophes.
It seems an ugly way of doing it, but it works.
I have to output a results table should I use hed(), startTable(), tr() fLabelCell() & td()?
Do I define $out to be a concatenated string of these functions then call another function to output $out?
I’ve been trying to find out about the core defined functions but the wiki pages for them are all empty.
Thanks
There are 10 types of people in the world: those who understand binary, and those who don’t.
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Re: First Plugin ... Help with Public side needed
Still plodding on with this … I have it working but the output is appearing before the <!DOCTYPE html tag at the top of the page and not as part of the article body or excerpt.
Does anyone know how to correct this?
Thanks
There are 10 types of people in the world: those who understand binary, and those who don’t.
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Re: First Plugin ... Help with Public side needed
geoff777 wrote:
output is appearing before the <!DOCTYPE html tag at the top of the page and not as part of the article body or excerpt.
Instead of using echo $out
in your tag, use return $out
at the very end, which will then put the contents where the tag is in the page flow.
In answer to your previous question above, I usually concatenate them into an array ($out[] = 'first bit'; ... $out[] = 'second bit';...
) and then join('', $out)
for display. Alternatively, look at the core’s doWrap()
function which takes a $out
array and wraptag, break, class, etc and does it for you.
btw, sorry I didn’t reply to your e-mail. I’ll try and get back to you when I get a moment.
Last edited by Bloke (2012-02-21 12:42:55)
The smd plugin menagerie — for when you need one more gribble of power from Textpattern. Bleeding-edge code available on GitHub.
Txp Builders – finely-crafted code, design and Txp
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Re: First Plugin ... Help with Public side needed
Hi thanks for all the help Stef.
$out[] and join() worked nicely.
I’ve decided not to use article_id as it is limiting.
Instead I’m auto_incrementing a vote_id.
This means you can have the tag outside article context .. in sidebars etc.
You can also have multiple votes on the same page.
It does mean the tag has one attribute now … vote_id=“integer”
I’ve tested it with as many combinations of options as I can.
It is working.
I’d like to know if any one wants to alpha test it?
I can email the txt file to you. Unless there is a better method. (Am I allowed to post it here?)
Thanks
Geoff
Last edited by geoff777 (2012-02-23 17:21:09)
There are 10 types of people in the world: those who understand binary, and those who don’t.
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Re: First Plugin ... Help with Public side needed
If I were you, I would be developing it openly (by the means of DRCS). That would allow us (Stef, me, others) to actually review the code, changes, fork it and patch it. I would recommend GitHub or BitBucket as the service and git as the version control system. GitHub offers a great service with Issue tracker, wiki etc.
I moved my (open) plugins from our private SVN (hosted on Springloops) to Github last month and couldn’t be happier. E.g. rah_bitly. All individual plugins used to be in single repo before. Ugh — tagging releases in SVN wasn’t optimal at all and it got slow very fast with the 2000 revisions per year cycle.
Last edited by Gocom (2012-02-23 19:53:24)
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